Golder v. Rabinowitz

190 A. 407, 125 Pa. Super. 573, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 85
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 28, 1936
DocketAppeal, 296
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 190 A. 407 (Golder v. Rabinowitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golder v. Rabinowitz, 190 A. 407, 125 Pa. Super. 573, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 85 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

This action was begun by an attachment under the Act of 1869, March 17, P. L. 8. The plaintiff sought to recover commissions alleged to be due from the defendant on renewal payments of premiums on policies of *576 life insurance issued by the United States Life Insurance Company, the garnishee, and also asked for an accounting. I-Ie obtained a verdict, in the sum of 1597.39, but no mention was made therein whether he was entitled to an accounting. Judgment was entered thereafter, and defendant appealed.

The plaintiff, in his amended statement of claim, averred that during the month of August, 1928, he and defendant, who was the general agent and manager of the United States Life Insurance Company at Philadelphia, entered into an oral agreement, whereby plaintiff was to become a sub-agent of the defendant and receive a certain portion of the first year’s premiums on policies he solicited, and a commission of five per cent on all renewal premiums commencing with the second year and continuing for nine years, provided the minimum amount of insurance obtained by plaintiff during any one year should total ¡§25,000; that after the oral agreement was entered into, the defendant, on August 24, 1928, submitted to him a written agreement, representing that it contained all the terms and provisions of the oral agreement; that he reads and writes English with great difficulty and as he had a long-standing friendship with the defendant he reposed the utmost confidence in him and requested that the contents of the written contract be read to him before he executed it; defendant read to him that the commissions for renewals were to cover the nine subsequent years’ renewal premiums and thereupon the contract was signed in triplicate, one copy of which was to be given plaintiff, but defendant advised him that he would keep it for him in his safe; that he never received a copy of the agreement and was unaware that the nine years were omitted from the written agreement until his attorney obtained a photostatic copy thereof about the time this suit was in *577 stituted, to wit, December 13, 1934; that Ms attorney failed to notice when he filed the original statement of claim that the agent did not include renewal commissions for nine years, and, as a result, plaintiff’s amended statement was filed.

Plaintiff averred further that for the quarter “dated August 1, 1934,” defendant had received from the United States Life Insurance Company, on behalf of the plaintiff, $57.00, and for the quarter “dated November 1, 1935,” $50.42, making a total of $107.42; that in addition thereto he was entitled to an accounting from the defendant as to any and all renewal commissions which the defendant had received since November 1, 1934, up until the date of the filing of the amended statement of claim (July 16, 1935), as well as any and all renewal commissions that the defendant was entitled to receive from the United States Life Insurance Company, on behalf of the plaintiff, up until the date of the trial and thereafter for the balance of nine years, beginning with the second year from the date of the writing of such insurance and whatever amounts may appear to be due the plaintiff after such accounting is had, in accordance with the oral agreement entered into; that as defendant fraudulently omitted from the written agreement the provision for payment of renewal commissions for nine years, plaintiff further asked the court to make it conform to the terms and provisions of the oral agreement.

The affidavit of defense denied the fraud alleged, and averred that the written contract was the sole and whole agreement, and that the plaintiff had been paid all the money due him.

The evidence introduced at the trial showed that many of the policies upon which plaintiff claimed commission had been issued about three months before he became an agent under the alleged contract and before *578 he had a license; that commissions on the renewal premiums were paid to plaintiff according to the terms of the written agreement, until the defendant severed his connection with the United States Life Insurance Company, and that thereafter he refused to pay commissions on renewals to plaintiff on the ground that the contract between them had been terminated. We think the proof of payments of these premiums by defendant was not important if they were mistakenly made. If further payments are not legally due, he is not obliged to make them. Defendant testified at one time that his employment with the insurance company had terminated in April, and at another that it was in May, 1934.

The written agreement contained a schedule of commissions, providing for a certain per cent the first year, which varied according to the character and amount of a policy, and “Renewal for Subsequent Years 5%.” It also provided as follows:

“This agreement is made for an indefinite period but may be terminated on ten days’ notice by either party hereto and unless so terminated or as provided in ‘Requirements and Provisions’ on the reverse side hereof shall be terminated by the death of the party of the first part or by the termination of the contract made by the Company with the party of the first part.”

Pour questions involved in this appeal deserve consideration :

1. Is the plaintiff entitled to recover commissions on policies written before he was licensed as an agent?

2. Was the plaintiff entitled to recover commissions which became due between the date suit was commenced and the date of the trial?

3. Was the plaintiff entitled to a money judgment?

4. Was the testimony offered by the plaintiff sufficient to change the provisions of the written contract?

*579 1. The plaintiff’s amended statement alleged that “the plaintiff was, in August, 1928, and still is, a registered licensed insurance agent and broker.” This was not denied by the defendant. It appeared from testimony offered by plaintiff that the majority of the commissions alleged to be due were from premiums on policies written for members of the Old Friends Society through his influence, prior to August, 1928, and at a time when, under his own testimony, he did not have a license to sell insurance.

The appellee contended that his failure to have a license was a matter defendant failed to set up in his affidavit of defense which precluded him from raising it at the trial. Plaintiff, in his statement of claim, did not aver that any commissions were due on policies issued prior to August 24, 1928. There was no reason, therefore, for the defendant, in his affidavit of defense, to aver plaintiff’s failure to procure a license prior to that time. That fact was not in issue under plaintiff’s statement. Notwithstanding the subject-matter of the pleadings, the trial judge refused to sustain repeated objections of the defendant to the introduction of evidence relating to commissions on policies of insurance alleged to have been sold by plaintiff prior to August 24, 1928. Section 16 of the Act of 1915, May 14, P. L. 488, as amended April 22, 1929, P. L. 627, §4 (12 PS §452), provides that no evidence is admissible, except that which relates to issues of fact averred in the pleadings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A. 407, 125 Pa. Super. 573, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golder-v-rabinowitz-pasuperct-1936.